12 CapitalPress.com Friday, March 5, 2021 Safety: ‘How did you survive that?’ printing presses, and they never miss the opportunity to share with neigh- bors and other farmers in the local community. Continued from Page 1 ravine. The 4-wheeler, the sprayer and me went over the edge of the ravine with the 4-wheeler on top of me,” he said. “The real key here is I didn’t take an extra few seconds to turn around and survey my surround- ings and how close I was to the ravine,” he said. Now his left leg was pinned under the 4-wheeler — 7 feet down in a V-shaped ravine with no way to escape or roll the ATV. “I was trapped,” he said. First he had to find his glasses. Then he took a mental survey of his condition. His shoulder and side had taken the brunt of the fall. Fortunately, the cell phone he wore in a pouch on his belt had survived. But who should he call? His wife couldn’t help, and it would take first responders hours to find him in the remote spot on his 2,000-acre farm. He thought of his neighbors and distant cousin Bob Endorf and his son Drew. Both are on the local fire department’s rescue squad. He directed them to his loca- tion. It took about 25 minutes. Bob and Drew were able to lift the 4-wheeler enough to free Endorf. “They absolutely couldn’t believe I could walk and wasn’t hurt. All three of us got in our pick- ups and went and had a good bar- becue lunch,” he said. Endorf is one of the lucky ones. Fatal injuries among U.S. agricul- tural workers totaled 183 in 2019. The number of non-fatal injuries among agricultural workers is no longer tracked at the national level. But in 2015, that number was 167 every day with 5% involving per- manent impairment. Experts say many of the acci- dents could have been avoided if farmers were more aware of the dangers they face and how quickly accidents can happen. Endorf went home after lunch, sat his wife, Colleen, down and told her what happened. They took the skid loader to the pasture and pulled the 4-wheeler out of the ravine. “When she saw that, she just burst into tears and said, ‘How did you survive that?’” he said. Making it count Endorf is grateful he survived and is eager to share his experi- ence. He wants his fellow farm- ers to be aware of on-farm dangers and ATVs in particular. “If I can save one person from losing their life or a serious injury than I feel like it’s worth it to tell my story,” he said. His experience is one of many shared in the Telling The Story Project, which is spreading the message of farm safety through compelling stories of tragic acci- dents and injuries in the farmers’ words and those of their families. The project is a joint effort of the Central States Center for Agricultural Safety and Health in Omaha, Neb.; the Great Plains Center for Agricultural Health in Iowa City, Iowa; and the Upper Midwest Agricultural Safety and Health Center in Minneapolis, Minn. It is funded by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Agriculture, Forestry Multifaceted approach Telling The Story Project David Endorf Power of prevention Stephanie Leonard/Telling the Story David Endorf’s 4-wheeler at the bottom of a 7-foot ravine. He was pinned under it until neighbors were able to free him. David Endorf was spraying brushy trees in this creek pas- ture on Aug. 18, 2018, when the rear wheel of his 4-wheeler went over the edge of the ravine. and Fishing Program. The proj- ect was officially launched in 2018 when the website went live. The three centers working on the project all have outreach and safety programs and saw an oppor- tunity for telling those compel- ling stories to raise awareness and prevent accidents, said Scott Hei- berger, a health communications manager at the National Farm Medicine Center in Marshfield, Wis., and a member of the out- reach team at the Upper Midwest Agricultural Safety and Health Center. “We saw an opportunity to con- nect directly with farmers and farm families. We just saw this as a way to meet farmers where they’re at,” he said. Statistics are helpful and can support the message of farm safety. But personal stories are more effective than a set of num- bers, he said. “People do remember a story, that’s the bottom line. They get their attention and foster farm- er-to-farmer discussions. And research shows farmers trust each other more than anyone else,” he said. The Telling The Story Project is facilitating those discussions by letting farmers tell their personal The injuries range from machin- ery entanglement and falls to expo- sure to poisonous hydrogen sulfide gas and explosions. For some it meant the fight of their life and a long stay in the Intensive Care Unit. For many, it meant surgeries, skin grafts, pros- thetics and ongoing physical, respi- ratory or occupational therapy. For others, it meant an untimely and tragic death. Their cautionary tales, as told through Telling The Story, carry similar laments: • They were working alone. • They didn’t tell anyone where they were. • They were in a hurry. • They didn’t have their mind fully on the task. • They weren’t aware of their surroundings. • They didn’t take precautions. • They did something they knew they shouldn’t. For all of the storytellers — the survivors and the families of those less fortunate — it’s brought new awareness of on-farm dan- gers, changes to their operations and hard-won advocacy for farm safety. The farmers take their messages to local events and national confer- ences, over the airwaves and onto Courtesy of David Endorf stories, he said. Farmers might be inclined to shrug off national statistics, think- ing the chance of an accident hap- pening to them is pretty low. But if another farmer is telling them it happened to him and they can see themselves in that story, mak- ing the same decisions and tak- ing the same shortcuts, it helps, he said. They can see that the everyday, mundane things they’ve done a hundred times can still go bad, he said. “Everyone knows safety is important, but it makes it real,” he said. Storytelling is a really good way to influence change. Lectures on farm safety aren’t particularly effective, but a neighbor taking extra steps to prevent accidents is, he said. “The credibility of the storytell- ers is so important,” he said. Safety first “It all happened so fast,” is a recurring theme in the farmers’ narratives. Their stories include everyday chores that ended in injury or death due to distraction, hurried action, corner-cutting, missteps, lack of safety gear or lack of awareness. China: Soybean demand in China is going to be important Continued from Page 1 result of China and every- thing else going on I think is something that we all have to wrap our head around,” he said. China has the potential to import 30 million tons of corn from the world, but pork prices in China are fall- ing and corn in China is $11 a bushel, he said. “I can’t tell you whether China is going to import 5 million tons of corn or 30 million tons of corn. We all have to keep this in mind, this is not going to be smooth,” he said. Soybean demand in China is going to be import- ant. It dropped from 94 mil- lion tons to 82.5 million tons, and two years later it increased to 100 million tons. There will be contin- ued volatility going forward, he said. Meat and poultry imports The Telling The Story Proj- ect takes a multifaceted approach to spreading the message and has had more than 22,000 visitors to its website. Project organizers encourage media outlets and other organiza- tions to use the stories to promote safety awareness. The project also offers discussion guides for teach- ers, 4-H and FFA leaders, farm managers and others looking for ways to start a conversation about safety. The effort has focused on the Midwest, but other organizations are emulating it with their own sto- rytelling projects. Inspired by the project, the National Children’s Center for Rural and Agricultural Health and Safety has started its own storytelling campaign. Getty Images China has the potential to import 30 million tons of corn from the world. by China are another area to watch. Those imports went from $11 billion two years ago to $28 billion in 2020. China’s total agricultural imports from around the world went from $136 bil- lion two years ago to an esti- mated $170 billion in 2020. “That trend is obviously something we need to keep in mind,” he said. He thinks that increase is more in consumer-finished product, a meat discussion more than a bulk soybean and grain conversation, he said. In the meantime, Endorf, the Nebraska farmer, has made sev- eral changes to the way he oper- ates. He also has some advice for other farmers. “I make it a habit to let my wife know where I am,” he said. Farmers often work alone and in secluded locations. Even if someone were 20 feet away from the scene of his accident, they never would have seen him. “Let someone know where you’re going to be and what you’re doing,” he said. He’s also more cognizant than he used to be every time he gets on a 4-wheeler and advises others to do the same. They’re a very handy tool — all farmers have them, he said. “We get complacent. We take them for granted, you just hop on them and go. Take a few extra sec- onds for safety, slow down and think about what can happen,” he said. His accident was caused by dis- traction — thinking about that bar- becue lunch. “Keep your mind focused on what you’re doing, on the task at hand,” he said. He’s also adamant about mak- ing sure his cell phone is on his hip and not left in the pickup or on the seat of the tractor — and he makes sure it’s charged. “When you’re pinned under- neath something and can’t move much, you realize pretty fast you need help. It’s important to keep a charged cell phone on you,” he said. He keeps a photo on his cell phone of his upside down 4-wheeler at the bottom of the ravine. It’s a stark image of the seriousness of the situation and what can happen. People who see it wonder how he survived. “A guardian angel was looking over me that day,” he said. He knows he could have easily lost his life. “Safety is important every day, not only on farms but in our gen- eral livelihood,” he said, adding he just returned from a 40-mile trip hauling hay to auction. “You just have to have safety in the back of your mind all the way around,” he said. Permit: Hammonds originally lost permission to graze the allotments near Diamond, Ore., in 2014 Continued from Page 1 grazing permit, the Interior Department cited the Ham- mond family’s historic use and proximity to the federal property. Steven Hammond, who operates the ranch, and his father, Dwight, originally lost permission to graze the allotments near Diamond, Ore., in 2014 when the gov- ernment refused to renew their permit after they were criminally charged with set- ting fires to rangelands. The Hammonds were convicted and completed their initial prison terms, then ordered back behind bars after the 9th U.S. Cir- cuit Court of Appeals ruled they had to serve five-year mandatory minimum sen- tences for arson. Their return to prison in early 2016 sparked pro- tests that culminated in a monthlong stand-off with federal agents at the Mal- heur National Wildlife that attracted national attention. The ranchers were released early in 2018 after receiving a full pardon from former President Don- ald Trump, which prompted the Interior Department to renew their grazing permit the following year due to “changed circumstances.” However, environmental groups convinced a federal judge to reverse that deci- sion in 2019 because the grazing permit was renewed contrary to regulations. The Interior Department then opened up the graz- ing allotments to applica- tions from other ranchers but ultimately decided to issue a new permit to the Hammond family earlier this year. The Western Watersheds Project, Oregon Natural Desert Association, Wil- dearth Guardians and Cen- ter for Biological Diver- sity filed another lawsuit seeking to rescind the graz- ing permit’s most recent approval. The environmental plaintiffs argued the fed- eral government’s decision involved “rushed, opaque, and highly unusual pub- lic processes” that were “tainted by political influ- ence and are not the prod- uct of reasoned, lawful decision-making,” the com- plaint said. According to the com- plaint, the federal gov- ernment approved the grazing permit “without opportunities for public participation required by law” and wrongly deter- mined the Hammonds were more qualified than other applicants. The decision also didn’t comply with land use pro- tections for the sage grouse and with a statute aimed at conserving the “long term ecological integrity” of Steens Mountain in Eastern Oregon, the complaint said. Steven Hammond and Alan Schroeder, an attor- ney for the family, were not available for comment as of press time.